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Published byEthel Carpenter Modified over 9 years ago
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Why does the US Government conduct a census every 10 years?
Populations Why does the US Government conduct a census every 10 years?
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What causes populations to grow?
What contributes to fast or slow growth of a population?
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Population – all individuals of a species that live together in 1 place at 1 time
3 key features of populations: 1. size – # of individuals – if small, risk extinction (disaster & little genetic variation)
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2. density - # of individuals in an area
3. dispersion – how individuals are arranged
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Population Ranges A species might not be able to expand its population range because it cannot survive the abiotic conditions found in the expanded region. Common dolphin Pupfish
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Population-Limiting Factors
There are two categories of limiting factors—density-independent factors and density-dependent factors.
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Density independent factors – weather, fire, climate, pollution & human alteration of landscape can affect growth Any factor that does not depend on the # of members in a population
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Density-Dependent Factors
Any factor in the environment that depends on the #of members in a population Biotic factors Disease Competition Parasites
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Growth=more births than deaths
Exponential growth curve = rate of population growth stays the same Carrying capacity- the population size an environment can sustain (limiting resources – water, food- density dependent factors) When a population is below the carrying capacity, the birth rate is high, when the population is at the carrying capacity, the death rate is high
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All populations grow exponentially until some limiting factor slows the growth.
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Carrying capacity is limited by the energy, water, oxygen, and nutrients available.
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A population stops increasing when the number of births is less than the number of deaths or when emigration exceeds immigration.
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The rate strategy, or r-strategy, is an adaptation for living in an environment where fluctuation in biotic or abiotic factors occur. An r-strategist is generally a small organism. Short life span Produces many offspring
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The carrying-capacity strategy, or k-strategy, is an adaptation for living in stable environments.
A k-strategist is generally a larger organism. Long life span Produces few offspring
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